fabric - Fabric Interface Library
-
#include <rdma/fabric.h>
Libfabric is a high-performance fabric software library designed
to provide low-latency interfaces to fabric hardware.
Libfabric provides 'process direct I/O' to application software
communicating across fabric software and hardware. Process direct I/O,
historically referred to as RDMA, allows an application to directly access
network resources without operating system interventions. Data transfers can
occur directly to and from application memory.
There are two components to the libfabric software:
- Fabric
Providers
- Conceptually, a fabric provider may be viewed as a local hardware NIC
driver, though a provider is not limited by this definition. The first
component of libfabric is a general purpose framework that is capable of
handling different types of fabric hardware. All fabric hardware devices
and their software drivers are required to support this framework. Devices
and the drivers that plug into the libfabric framework are referred to as
fabric providers, or simply providers. Provider details may be found in
fi_provider(7).
- Fabric
Interfaces
- The second component is a set of communication operations. Libfabric
defines several sets of communication functions that providers can
support. It is not required that providers implement all the interfaces
that are defined; however, providers clearly indicate which interfaces
they do support.
The fabric interfaces are designed such that they are cohesive and
not simply a union of disjoint interfaces. The interfaces are logically
divided into two groups: control interfaces and communication operations.
The control interfaces are a common set of operations that provide access to
local communication resources, such as address vectors and event queues. The
communication operations expose particular models of communication and
fabric functionality, such as message queues, remote memory access, and
atomic operations. Communication operations are associated with fabric
endpoints.
Applications will typically use the control interfaces to discover
local capabilities and allocate necessary resources. They will then allocate
and configure a communication endpoint to send and receive data, or perform
other types of data transfers, with remote endpoints.
The control interfaces APIs provide applications access to network
resources. This involves listing all the interfaces available, obtaining the
capabilities of the interfaces and opening a provider.
- fi_getinfo -
Fabric Information
- The fi_getinfo call is the base call used to discover and request fabric
services offered by the system. Applications can use this call to indicate
the type of communication that they desire. The results from fi_getinfo,
fi_info, are used to reserve and configure fabric resources.
fi_getinfo returns a list of fi_info structures. Each structure
references a single fabric provider, indicating the interfaces that the
provider supports, along with a named set of resources. A fabric provider
may include multiple fi_info structures in the returned list.
- fi_fabric -
Fabric Domain
- A fabric domain represents a collection of hardware and software resources
that access a single physical or virtual network. All network ports on a
system that can communicate with each other through the fabric belong to
the same fabric domain. A fabric domain shares network addresses and can
span multiple providers. libfabric supports systems connected to multiple
fabrics.
- fi_domain -
Access Domains
- An access domain represents a single logical connection into a fabric. It
may map to a single physical or virtual NIC or a port. An access domain
defines the boundary across which fabric resources may be associated. Each
access domain belongs to a single fabric domain.
- fi_endpoint
- Fabric Endpoint
- A fabric endpoint is a communication portal. An endpoint may be either
active or passive. Passive endpoints are used to listen for connection
requests. Active endpoints can perform data transfers. Endpoints are
configured with specific communication capabilities and data transfer
interfaces.
- fi_eq - Event
Queue
- Event queues, are used to collect and report the completion of
asynchronous operations and events. Event queues report events that are
not directly associated with data transfer operations.
- fi_cq - Completion
Queue
- Completion queues are high-performance event queues used to report the
completion of data transfer operations.
- fi_cntr - Event
Counters
- Event counters are used to report the number of completed asynchronous
operations. Event counters are considered light-weight, in that a
completion simply increments a counter, rather than placing an entry into
an event queue.
- fi_mr - Memory
Region
- Memory regions describe application local memory buffers. In order for
fabric resources to access application memory, the application must first
grant permission to the fabric provider by constructing a memory region.
Memory regions are required for specific types of data transfer
operations, such as RMA transfers (see below).
- fi_av - Address
Vector
- Address vectors are used to map higher level addresses, such as IP
addresses, which may be more natural for an application to use, into
fabric specific addresses. The use of address vectors allows providers to
reduce the amount of memory required to maintain large address look-up
tables, and eliminate expensive address resolution and look-up methods
during data transfer operations.
Fabric endpoints are associated with multiple data transfer
interfaces. Each interface set is designed to support a specific style of
communication, with an endpoint allowing the different interfaces to be used
in conjunction. The following data transfer interfaces are defined by
libfabric.
- fi_msg - Message
Queue
- Message queues expose a simple, message-based FIFO queue interface to the
application. Message data transfers allow applications to send and receive
data with message boundaries being maintained.
- fi_tagged -
Tagged Message Queues
- Tagged message lists expose send/receive data transfer operations built on
the concept of tagged messaging. The tagged message queue is conceptually
similar to standard message queues, but with the addition of 64-bit tags
for each message. Sent messages are matched with receive buffers that are
tagged with a similar value.
- fi_rma - Remote
Memory Access
- RMA transfers are one-sided operations that read or write data directly to
a remote memory region. Other than defining the appropriate memory region,
RMA operations do not require interaction at the target side for the data
transfer to complete.
- fi_atomic -
Atomic
- Atomic operations can perform one of several operations on a remote memory
region. Atomic operations include well-known functionality, such as
atomic-add and compare-and-swap, plus several other pre-defined calls.
Unlike other data transfer interfaces, atomic operations are aware of the
data formatting at the target memory region.
Logging can be controlled using the FI_LOG_LEVEL, FI_LOG_PROV, and
FI_LOG_SUBSYS environment variables.
- FI_LOG_LEVEL
- FI_LOG_LEVEL controls the amount of logging data that is output. The
following log levels are defined.
- - Warn
- Warn is the least verbose setting and is intended for reporting errors or
warnings.
- -
Trace
- Trace is more verbose and is meant to include non-detailed output helpful
to tracing program execution.
- - Info
- Info is high traffic and meant for detailed output.
- -
Debug
- Debug is high traffic and is likely to impact application performance.
Debug output is only available if the library has been compiled with
debugging enabled.
- FI_LOG_PROV
- The FI_LOG_PROV environment variable enables or disables logging from
specific providers. Providers can be enabled by listing them in a comma
separated fashion. If the list begins with the '^' symbol, then the list
will be negated. By default all providers are enabled.
Example: To enable logging from the psm and sockets provider:
FI_LOG_PROV="psm,sockets"
Example: To enable logging from providers other than psm:
FI_LOG_PROV="^psm"
- FI_LOG_SUBSYS
- The FI_LOG_SUBSYS environment variable enables or disables logging at the
subsystem level. The syntax for enabling or disabling subsystems is
similar to that used for FI_LOG_PROV. The following subsystems are
defined.
- - core
- Provides output related to the core framework and its management of
providers.
- -
fabric
- Provides output specific to interactions associated with the fabric
object.
- -
domain
- Provides output specific to interactions associated with the domain
object.
- -
ep_ctrl
- Provides output specific to endpoint non-data transfer operations, such as
CM operations.
- -
ep_data
- Provides output specific to endpoint data transfer operations.
- - av
- Provides output specific to address vector operations.
- - cq
- Provides output specific to completion queue operations.
- - eq
- Provides output specific to event queue operations.
- - mr
- Provides output specific to memory registration.
The libfabric build scripts will install all providers that are
supported by the installation system. Providers that are missing build
prerequisites will be disabled. Installed providers will dynamically check
for necessary hardware on library initialization and respond appropriately
to application queries.
Users can enable or disable available providers through build
configuration options. See 'configure --help' for details. In general, a
specific provider can be controlled using the configure option '--enable-'.
For example, '--enable-udp' (or '--enable-udp=yes') will add the udp
provider to the build. To disable the provider, '--enable-udp=no' can be
used.
Providers can also be enable or disabled at run time using the
FI_PROVIDER environment variable. The FI_PROVIDER variable is set to a comma
separated list of providers to include. If the list begins with the '^'
symbol, then the list will be negated.
Example: To enable the udp and tcp providers only, set:
FI_PROVIDER="udp,tcp"
The fi_info utility, which is included as part of the libfabric
package, can be used to retrieve information about which providers are
available in the system. Additionally, it can retrieve a list of all
environment variables that may be used to configure libfabric and each
provider. See fi_info(1) for more details.
Core features of libfabric and its providers may be configured by
an administrator through the use of environment variables. Man pages will
usually describe the most commonly accessed variables, such as those
mentioned above. However, libfabric defines interfaces for publishing and
obtaining environment variables. These are targeted for providers, but allow
applications and users to obtain the full list of variables that may be set,
along with a brief description of their use.
A full list of variables available may be obtained by running the
fi_info application, with the -e or --env command line option.
Because libfabric is designed to provide applications direct
access to fabric hardware, there are limits on how libfabric resources may
be used in conjunction with system calls. These limitations are notable for
developers who may be familiar programming to the sockets interface.
Although limits are provider specific, the following restrictions apply to
many providers and should be adhered to by applications desiring portability
across providers.
- fork
- Fabric resources are not guaranteed to be available by child processes.
This includes objects, such as endpoints and completion queues, as well as
application controlled data buffers which have been assigned to the
network. For example, data buffers that have been registered with a fabric
domain may not be available in a child process because of copy on write
restrictions.
libfabric releases maintain compatibility with older releases, so
that compiled applications can continue to work as-is, and previously
written applications will compile against newer versions of the library
without needing source code changes. The changes below describe ABI updates
that have occurred and which libfabric release corresponds to the
changes.
Note that because most functions called by applications actually
call static inline functions, which in turn reference function pointers in
order to call directly into providers, libfabric only exports a handful of
functions directly. ABI changes are limited to those functions, most notably
the fi_getinfo call and its returned attribute structures.
The ABI version is independent from the libfabric release
version.
The initial libfabric release (1.0.0) also corresponds to ABI
version 1.0. The 1.0 ABI was unchanged for libfabric major.minor versions
1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, and 1.4.
A number of external data structures were appended starting with
libfabric version 1.5. These changes included adding the fields to the
following data structures. The 1.1 ABI was exported by libfabric versions
1.5 and 1.6.
- fi_fabric_attr
- Added api_version
- fi_domain_attr
- Added cntr_cnt, mr_iov_limit, caps, mode, auth_key, auth_key_size,
max_err_data, and mr_cnt fields. The mr_mode field was also changed from
an enum to an integer flag field.
- fi_ep_attr
- Added auth_key_size and auth_key fields.
The 1.2 ABI version was exported by libfabric versions 1.7 and
1.8, and expanded the following structure.
- fi_info
- The fi_info structure was expanded to reference a new fabric object,
fid_nic. When available, the fid_nic references a new set of attributes
related to network hardware details.
The 1.3 ABI is also the current ABI version. All libfabric
releases starting at 1.9 export this ABI.
- fi_domain_attr
- Added tclass
- fi_tx_attr
- Added tclass